Past Exhibitions

Browse the Luther W. Brady Art Gallery’s past exhibitions, including those held in the gallery’s past location in the Media and Public Affairs Building and the Dimock Gallery in the Lisner Auditorium, both on George Washington University’s campus.

2023 - 2024

     

A Corcoran Homecoming: The Art of Carroll Sockwell 

January 24 - March 9, 2024

Black and white photograph of man in hat and white shirt

Image courtesy of the Estate of Carroll Sockwell/ Washington Color Gallery.

Carroll Sockwell was a prominent figure in the Washington, D.C. art scene from the 1960s until his passing in 1992.  Sockwell also  had a long-standing relationship with the Corcoran Gallery of Art, first as a student at the School, then as a professional artist whose work was shown in several Corcoran Gallery of Art exhibitions.

 

The Art of Collecting: Gifts from the Luther W. Brady Estate

September 28, 2023 - March 9, 2024

Boulder shape in center with blue sky and lines around it

Image: Kit White, City, 2006, oil on wood panel, 20-1/2 x 24-1/2". Gift of the Estate of Luther W. Brady, 2023 (P.2023.1.43). © Kit White

The celebrated oncologist and philanthropist Luther W. Brady bequeathed more than 130 works of art to GWU. The works represent a transformative gift to the GW Collection and the exhibit includes paintings and sculptures by internationally renowned artists, including Richard Diebenkorn, Sam Francis, Anthony Gormley, Nancy Graves, Richard Motherwell, Louise Nevelson, Sean Scully, and Frank Stella.

 
 

 

 

GW Collection: Faculty Selection

September 28 - December 16, 2023

Image: Louis Stettner, Young Girl, Penn Station, N.Y.C., 1953, 26-1/2" x 20". Gift of Lawrence Benenson, 1983 (P.83.18.375). © The Louis Stettner Estate

Corcoran School faculty from across all programs select works from the GW Collection of artwork, including important paintings, sculptures, graphics, textiles, ceramics, historic furnishings and photographs. They respond to the work in relation to their artistic practice, pedagogical approach or personal interests. Featuring faculty Lauren Onkey, Anna Kimmel, Marc Choi, Douglas Crawford, Andrea Dietz, Michele Carlson, Aasawari Kulkarni, Matt Eich, Schillica Howard, Susan Sterner and Caroline Woolard.

 

2022 - 2023

Rethinking Legacy and Memory: Behind the Image of Ulysses S. Grant

May 1 - 19, 2023

Black and white image of a bedroom interior with a bed and chairs
Image: E. N. Doubleday, Saratoga Springs, New York, Interior of Grant Cottage, Mount McGregor, n.d., albumen print, 4 1/4" x 7 1/2". Gift of Ulysses S. Grant III, 1950 (USG76)

This exhibition presents artifacts collected by his grandson, Ulysses S. Grant III, and donated to the GW Collection. As you view each one, consider: what clues does it offer about Grant as an individual?

View Into the Senses

November 30, 2022 – March 18, 2023

Green geometric shapes in varying shades surrounded by a beige border
Image: Larry Zox, Green Composition, 1980, color lithograph on paper.  Gift of Jayson Pankin, 1996 (P.96.7.27) © Larry Zox Estate

View Into the Senses highlights thirteen artists from the GW Collection. Created between 1957 through 1984, the works on paper elucidate how the first abstract expressionist movement shifted the art world’s focus from Europe to the United States, demonstrating new experiments in minimalism.

Renewal

September 15 - December 10, 2022

Silhouettes of sculptures overlaid in varying shades of green

The large-scale sculpture, Ghost Dance, by the artist Robert Stackhouse was gifted to the George Washington University as part of the Corcoran Study Collection in 2014. The Stackhouse work is a focal point for a juried exhibition of sculptural works by members of the Washington Sculptors Group that celebrate similar themes of renewal, rebirth, and sustainability explored in the Ghost Dance piece.

The exhibition was presented in Galleries 4 & 5 and funded by the Director's Discretionary Fund and the Friends of the Luther W. Brady Art Gallery.

2021 - 2022

Re/presentation

January - March 4, 2022

Color photograph looking into the window display of a store featuring women's undergarments.  Partial mannequin featured prominently to the right.  Reflections of the street seen on the left.

Curated by students in the Fall 2021 History of Exhibitions class, taught by Lynn Matheny, the Luther W. Brady Art Gallery presents Re/presentation.  An exhibition of photographs drawn from the Corcoran Study Collection, it explores how identity is mediated multiple times through the taking of a photograph and how what we present to the world is not always what is received by the viewer.  Images by artists such as Harold Edgerton, Annie Leibovitz, and Garry Winogrand are divided into sections including Gaze|Perception and Athleticism|Physicality.  The exhibition was presented in Gallery 6.

Spring Selections: Remember, Recall

January - March 4, 2022

Black and white photograph of a large boulder with petroglyphs carved into it.

How do our memories reflect what transpired?  How and what do we use to create a physical reminder?  Humanity strives to create memorials and remember in many ways: through memorials, writing, and of course artistic representation.  This Spring Selections show exhibits photographs, prints, and drawings from the GW Collection and Corcoran Study Collection centered around the subject of remembering and was presented in Galleries 4&5.

Concurring Experiences: Together, Apart

September 1 - December 17, 2021

Concurrent experiences: together, apart

Concurring Experiences: Together, Apart is an exhibition commemorating the one-year anniversary of the COVID-19 national lockdown, showcasing 23 works from the Corcoran Study Collection curated and researched in Fall 2020 by the MA Exhibition Design class History of Exhibitions, led by Dr. Lisa Lipinski. Through the lens of finding and uplifting community in times of isolation, the show follows eight themes.  Originally presented in an online format, with each theme linked to calls-to-actions, social justice organizations, and mutual aid funds, hoping to uplift these missions with larger audiences and community.  This exhibition is presented in Gallery 6.

Fall Selections: Building a Collection

September 1 - December 17, 2021

Print showing the interior of the Pantheon through columns with ornate capitals.  The domed ceiling is topped with an oculus and small figures of people show scale. [Link directs to the online collections database record]
Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Interior of the Pantheon (Veduta interna del Panteon) from "Views of Rome (Vedute di Roma)," 1768, etching on laid paper. Gift from the Trustees of the Corcoran Gallery of Art (Bequest of Frank B. Bristow). CGA.68.26.831

Presenting works from the Corcoran Study Collection and the GW Collection along with key loans, the exhibition presents little known works from those collections along with a focus on the work of William Christenberry.  This exhibition is presented in Gallery 4 & 5.

2019 - 2020

Dialogue: Art Students' Works and GW Collection Paintings

February 7 - March 13, 2020

Painting of the sky through a ceiling window that looks like the Corcoran rotunda
Baxon Hwang, The Window of Hope (Blue Sky), 2019, acrylic on cotton canvas. Gift of the artist, 2020. © Baxon Hwang

Students from the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design were given the opportunity to see their works on display alongside pieces from the GW Collection including artists such as Lowell Nesbitt, Alfred McAdams, James Twitty and Franklin White. The exhibition also included two new gifts of artwork by B.K. Adams and John Singer Sargent.

HOME: Selections from the Corcoran Study Collection

November 14, 2019 - March 13, 2020

Night time image of house from the outside, dark except for a light seen through the door
Richard Rodriguez, Chris's Room, 1979 (printed 1980), chromogenic color print. Gift from the Trustees of the Corcoran Gallery of Art, (Museum Purchase with the aid of funds from the National Endowment for the Arts, Washington, D.C., a Federal agency, and the Polaroid Corporation.)

In the first exhibition of works from the former Corcoran Gallery of Art’s collection, recently returned to the Flagg Building, HOME showed the many facets of “home” through photographic works. From works exploring Washington, D.C., the city many of us call home, to more intangible feelings of comfort, these works explore the many different definitions of home. Reinterpreted within a very personal subject, some of these photographs are unintentionally moving. Joe Cameron’s work showing reflections on the side of the National Museum of American History is imbued with a poignant reflection, while nearby an image of an open garage by Garry Winogrand becomes a portal to the safe interior of a home for the young child depicted.

For this exhibition, the Brady Art Gallery collaborated with students from the GW graduate course History of Exhibitions, taught by Lisa Lipinski, to produce this show. Drawing inspiration from the works in the Corcoran Study Collection and the theme of home, students researched and wrote the wall labels for the included works in this exhibition, adding to the continuing scholarship on the works. Artists include Joe Cameron, Vladimir Filonov, Jacob Gayer, Jan Groover, Paul Kennedy, Darrow Montgomery (Corcoran BFA ’87), Richard Rodriguez (GW MFA ’81), Arthur Rothstein, Claudia Smigrod (GW MFA ’78), Nikolai Smilyk, Diana Walker, and Garry Winogrand.

In Fashion: Selections from the GW Collection

August 8 - October 27, 2019

Black and white photograph by Stephen Livick of a mannequin dressed as a woman
Stephen Livick, Untitled (Single Mannequin), 1978, gelatin silver print. Gift of Lawrence Benenson, 1982. © Stephen Livick

This exhibition showcased a number of well-known designers, models and individuals connected to fashion including Carolina Herrera, Neiman Marcus, Brigitte Bardot and Mick Jagger. Countering the glamorous side of the fashion industry, photographs by Steven Livick drew attention to the slim line between models and their inanimate counterparts: mannequins.

This exhibition was presented in conjunction with the exhibition Fast Fashion/Slow Art

2018 - 2019

A Time for Action: Washington Artists Circa 1989

June 13 - October 13, 2019

Paintings of a window, a bridge, and a tree installed in a gallery

A companion exhibition opening to 6.13.89. This exhibition will display paintings, drawings and prints from the GW Collection by artists who registered their protest of the cancellation of the exhibition, Robert Mapplethorpe: A Perfect Moment. Also included are selected reminiscences of artists who were in Washington, D.C. at the time experiencing the upheaval as it occurred. Among these artists are Clark V. Fox, Andrew Hudson, Eric Rudd, Ann Purcell and William Newman.

 

Have a Look: Selections from the GW Collection

February 7 - March 23, 2019

Black and white print by Howard Hodgkin showing a window with a lounge chair in front of it.
Howard Hodgkin, Thinking Aloud in the Museum of Modern Art, 1979, etching on yellowish gray Hodgkinson handmade paper. Gift of Carleen Keating, 2017. © Howard Hodgkin Estate

Collecting since 1821, GW holds many “hidden” treasures ranging from an early painting by the famed painter Fernando Botero, to a trove of over 152 photographs by Andy Warhol.  The GW Collection now numbers over 3800 works with particular strengths in modern and contemporary photography, Washington-area artists and GW-associated artists such as alumni, professors and artists who were exhibited at the Dimock or Brady Art Galleries.  Now located in the Corcoran Flagg Building, the collection continues to represent the university’s long history in the Washington D.C. art scene.

 

Howard Hodgkin in Venice and Italy Inspiration

November 8, 2018 - January 26, 2019

Howard Hodgkin print Venice: Afternoon, orange background with black dots and central green area
Howard Hodgkin, Venice: Afternoon, 1995. Gift of Carleen Keating/© Alan Cristea Gallery, London/ The Bridgeman Art Library.

This exhibition displayed four prints from Howard Hodgkin’s 1995 “Venetian Series” from a recent gift of 10 prints from GW alumna Carleen Keating, alongside a rug designed by Mr. Hodgkin and a painting titled “Little Venice.”

Hodgkin (1923-2017), a British painter, completed more than 120 lithographs, etchings and screen prints during his career. This suite of four large-scale prints on Venice, measure approximately 5 by 6 feet each, mirroring Hodgkin’s paintings in size and the stylistic feeling provided by hand coloring and a brushstroke-like mark. The rug was gifted to GW by the late artist’s partner Antony Peattie and facilitated by Dr. Luther W. Brady. 

A companion exhibition, “Italy Inspiration,” showed photographs and prints from the GW Collection and paintings by GW alumni and a GW professor emeritus depicting the feel of Italy as well as the country’s unique sites.

 

2017 - 2018

Full Circle: Hue and Saturation in the Washington Color School

June 14 - October 26, 2018

Large colorful paintings installed in the Corcoran Flagg Building

In the first exhibition in their new space; three galleries in GW’s Corcoran School of the Arts & Design the Luther W. Brady Art Gallery paid tribute to the Washington Color School as well as the historic connections shared by GW’s art galleries and collection and the Corcoran.

This exhibition brought to mind parallels between the collection and exhibition histories of GW and the Corcoran. More than thirty works were shown by notable Washington Color School and Color Field artists including Blair Apperson, Leon Berkowitz, Renee Butler, Gene Davis, Tom Downing, Sam Gilliam, Gay Glading, Carol Brown Goldberg, Cynthia Bickley Green, James Hilleary, Darryl Hughto, Sheila Isham, Jacob Kainen, Daniel Yellow Kuhne, Mokha Laget, Morris Louis, Willem de Looper, Howard Mehring, Jules Olitski, Larry Poons, Ann Purcell, Paul Reed, Alma Thomas, Anne Truitt and Ken Young.